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recto sheet overall
Scene of McPherson's Death. Harper's Pictorial History of the Civil War, (Annotated)
recto sheet overall
recto sheet overall

Scene of McPherson's Death. Harper's Pictorial History of the Civil War, (Annotated)

Artist Kara Walker (American, born 1969)
Date2005
MediumSilkscreen
DimensionsUnframed: 53 x 39 inches (134.62 x 99.06 cm)
Framed: 55 1/2 x 41 5/8 x 2 inches (140.97 x 105.73 x 5.08 cm)
Credit LineGift of John and Sharon Hoffman in honor of the 75th anniversary of The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art
Object number2010.41
Edition/State/Proofed. of 35
On View
Not on view
Collections
DescriptionThis print shows a black silhouette of a man who is grinning at his severed foot. The background depicts a forest littered with cannonballs, wagon wheels, the skeleton of a horse and a tree with a sign posted on it.Gallery Label
In Scene of McPherson’s Death. Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, (Annotated), Kara Walker, an African-American artist, depicts a runaway slave wincing in horror at his severed foot, which has been cut off as punishment. Walker superimposes his flat black silhouette (her signature technique appropriated from Victorian era portraits) over a greatly enlarged photolithographic print of a photograph by George N. Barnard. The photograph documents the site near Atlanta where Union General James B. McPherson was killed by Confederate troops. The site is littered with remains of the battle: cannonballs, wagon wheels and a horse’s skeleton. Walker’s Scene of McPherson’s Death fuses her signature cutout with a historical photograph to capture the mayhem of the era.

Copyright© Kara Walker, courtesy of Sikkema Jenkins & Co., New York
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Silhouette
Kara Walker
1998
2017.35
Scene of General McPherson's Death
George N. Barnard
1864 or 1866
2005.27.237
Destruction of Hood's Ordnance Train, Atlanta
George N. Barnard
1864
2005.27.323
General store, Selma, Alabama
Walker Evans
January 1936
2005.27.397
Going to the Moors
John Harris
1847
2006.9.47
Traveling Ambrotype Studio
Unknown
ca. 1860
2005.27.427
Russian cannon, Crimean War
Léon-Eugène Méhédin
1855
2020.5.5
Harper's Bazaar
James Moore
1967; printed ca. 1990
2017.68.137